The year 1910 in science and technology involved some significant events, listed below.
Astronomy
Cartography
Chemistry
Mathematics
Physics
Physiology and medicine
- February 3 â The first pyloromyotomy, a surgery to correct the congenital narrowing (in infants) of the path between the stomach and the intestines (pyloric stenosis), is performed in Edinburgh by Sir Harold Stiles; however, the procedure is named for Dr. Wilhelm Ramstedt, who performs the surgery in 1911.
- March â International Psychoanalytical Association established.
- March 20 â The first clinic for treatment of occupational diseases is opened in Milan (Italy). (The first in the United States will be established in 1915.)
- May 18 â At the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of the Feeble-Minded, Henry H. Goddard introduces a system for classifying individuals with intellectual disability based on intelligence quotient (IQ): moron for those with an IQ of 51âÂÂ70, imbecile for those with an IQ of 26âÂÂ50, and idiot for those with an IQ of 0-25.
- July 15 â Publication of the eighth edition of Emil Kraepelin's Psychiatrie: Ein Lehrbuch für Studierende und Arzte, naming Alzheimer's disease as a variety of dementia.
- October (approx.) â Approximate date of origin of Manchurian plague, a form of pneumonic plague which by December is spreading through northeastern China, killing more than 40,000.
- Thomas Hunt Morgan discovers that genes are located on chromosomes.
- Chicago cardiologist James B. Herrick makes the first published identification of sickle cells in the blood of a patient with anemia.
- Platelets are first named by James Homer Wright.
- Peyton Rous demonstrates that a malignant tumor can be transmitted by a virus (which becomes known as the Rous sarcoma virus, a retrovirus).
- Hans Christian Jacobaeus of Sweden performs the first thoracoscopic diagnosis with a cystoscope.
Technology
- January 12âÂÂ13 â Lee De Forest conducts an experimental broadcast of part of a live performance of Tosca and, the next day, a performance with the participation of the Italian tenor Enrico Caruso from the stage of Metropolitan Opera House in New York City.
- February 17 â A patent for the first safety catch (firearms) is filed by the Browning Arms Company in the United States.
- February 25 â Thomas Edison's "trolleyless street car", powered by storage batteries rather than by overhead electric wires, is publicly demonstrated on New York City's 29th Street horse car tracks.
- March 28 â Henri Fabre makes the first flights in a seaplane, at Martigues, France.
- June 7 â William G. Allen of the Allen Manufacturing Company is granted a United States patent for a hex key.
- October â First publication of infrared photographs, by American optical physicist Robert W. Wood in the Royal Photographic Society's Journal.
- December 3âÂÂ18 â Georges Claude demonstrates the first modern neon light at the Paris Motor Show.
- Lieutenant-Colonel Dr. George Owen Squier of the United States Army invents telephone carrier multiplexing.
- Completion of Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad's Paulinskill Viaduct on its Lackawanna Cut-Off, the world's largest reinforced concrete structure at this time, built under the supervision of Lincoln Bush, its chief engineer.
Institutions
Awards
Births
- January 20 â Friederike Victoria Gessner, later Joy Adamson (murdered 1980), Austrian-born wildlife conservationist.
- February 9 â Jacques Monod (died 1976), French biochemist, winner of Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1965.
- February 13 â William Shockley (died 1989), American physicist.
- March 11 â Robert Havemann (died 1982), German chemist.
- April 6 â Barys Kit (died 2018), Russian-born American rocket scientist
- May 3 â Helen M. Duncan (died 1971), American geologist and paleontologist
- May 12 â Dorothy Hodgkin (died 1994), British chemist.
- June 11 â Jacques Cousteau (died 1997), French oceanographer.
- June 25 â Ian McTaggart-Cowan (died 2010), Scottish-born Canadian zoologist and ecologist.
- July 16 â David Lack (died 1973), English ornithologist.
- August 14 â Nüzhet GökdoÃÂan (died 2003), Turkish astronomer and mathematician
- August 18 â Pál Turán (died 1976), Hungarian mathematician.
- August 28 â C. Doris Hellman (died 1973), American historian of science.
- September 1 â Pierre Bézier (died 1999), French engineer.
- October 11 â Cahit Arf (died 1997), Turkish mathematician.
- October 27 â Margaret Hutchinson Rousseau (died 2000), American chemical engineer.
- October 31 â Victor Rothschild (died 1990), British polymath.
- December 24 â Bill Pickering (died 2004), New Zealand-born head of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
Deaths
References